Literature DB >> 28753438

Bilingual language intrusions and other speech errors in Alzheimer's disease.

Tamar H Gollan1, Alena Stasenko2, Chuchu Li3, David P Salmon3.   

Abstract

The current study investigated how Alzheimer's disease (AD) affects production of speech errors in reading-aloud. Twelve Spanish-English bilinguals with AD and 19 matched controls read-aloud 8 paragraphs in four conditions (a) English-only, (b) Spanish-only, (c) English-mixed (mostly English with 6 Spanish words), and (d) Spanish-mixed (mostly Spanish with 6 English words). Reading elicited language intrusions (e.g., saying la instead of the), and several types of within-language errors (e.g., saying their instead of the). Patients produced more intrusions (and self-corrected less often) than controls, particularly when reading non-dominant language paragraphs with switches into the dominant language. Patients also produced more within-language errors than controls, but differences between groups for these were not consistently larger with dominant versus non-dominant language targets. These results illustrate the potential utility of speech errors for diagnosis of AD, suggest a variety of linguistic and executive control impairments in AD, and reveal multiple cognitive mechanisms needed to mix languages fluently. The observed pattern of deficits, and unique sensitivity of intrusions to AD in bilinguals, suggests intact ability to select a default language with contextual support, to rapidly translate and switch languages in production of connected speech, but impaired ability to monitor language membership while regulating inhibitory control.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alzheimer’s disease; Bilingualism; Diagnosis; Reading-aloud; Speech errors; Switching

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28753438      PMCID: PMC5595660          DOI: 10.1016/j.bandc.2017.07.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Cogn        ISSN: 0278-2626            Impact factor:   2.310


  77 in total

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  9 in total

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5.  What reading aloud reveals about speaking: Regressive saccades implicate a failure to monitor, not inattention, in the prevalence of intrusion errors on function words.

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Review 7.  Including ethnic minorities in dementia research: Recommendations from a scoping review.

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8.  Codeswitching: A Bilingual Toolkit for Opportunistic Speech Planning.

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9.  Cognitive control regions are recruited in bilinguals' silent reading of mixed-language paragraphs.

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  9 in total

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